Abstract
The electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide (CO2) for the generation of multicarbon (C2+) products with high commercial value—e.g., ethanol and ethylene—is gaining growing interest due to the successful implementation of laboratory scale technologies that can reach high current densities (>500 mA cm−2) and Faradaic efficiencies (>60%), using a simplified approach in terms of configuration and cost. This is the case of microfluidic cells, low-temperature electrochemical flow systems which optimal operation sustains on the enhancement of the mass and charge transfer phenomena taking place at the gas diffusion electrode (GDE) | aqueous electrolyte interface where CO2 molecules are selectively transformed at the surface of the catalyst layer. This work presents an up-to-date overview of materials and operational conditions for microfluidic-type systems, providing significant enlightenment on the effects that the phenomena occurring at the GDE | electrolyte interface have over the CO2 reduction reaction kinetics towards the generation of C2+ products. It is shown that the integration of computational methods (particularly, density functional theory and computational fluid dynamics) into conventional experimental approaches is an effective strategy to elucidate the reaction mechanisms and mass/charge transfer trends determining the enhanced design of GDEs and the GDE | electrolyte interface.
Funder
Agencia Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo
Publisher
The Electrochemical Society